Election-year divisions rock North Carolina’s GOP [View all]
http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/election-year-divisions-rock-north-carolinas-gop?cid=eml_mra_20160502
Things could be better for North Carolina Republicans right now. After significant victories in 2012 and 2014, GOP policymakers are in a dominant position in the Tar Heel State, but as things stand, the rights hold on North Carolina may not last much longer.
The debacle surrounding the anti-LGBT HB2 continues to haunt the Republicans who rushed the law through, and the consequences are likely to linger. Gov. Pat McCrory (R), who was apparently caught off guard by the entire controversy, continues to struggle with the mess he helped create.
Voters have noticed. A conservative group released a statewide poll on Friday that found McCrory losing his re-election bid to state Attorney General Roy Cooper (D) by 10 points, 46% to 36%. And while Mitt Romney won North Carolina four years ago, this same poll showed Hillary Clinton leading Donald Trump in North Carolina by 12 points.
Sen. Richard Burr (R), meanwhile, is also seeking a second term this year, despite a low approval rating and a dwindling lead over his Democratic challenger.
Perhaps the state Republican Party can help calm the waters and get the GOP slate back on track? Not anytime soon they wont: WRAL reported over the weekend that the state party just fired its own chairman.
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http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/ned-barnett/article72280037.html
A tangled plan ensnared McCrory in HB2
The fallout from House Bill 2, with its usurpation of local powers and its codification of discrimination, is broad and ongoing. But one aspect of this legislative disaster remains mysterious and unexplored: How did a bill packed with so many profoundly divisive provisions get swept through the legislature in a one-day special session and signed into law within hours of its passage?
An excellent picture of the origins of HB2 lies in a Sept. 29, 2015 story reported by The News and Observers Colin Campbell. Its a rare and now valuable account because it focuses not on what passed at the chaotic end of the session but on an attempted legislative coup that failed.
The story reports on the work of a conference committee, a panel appointed to work out differences on bill language between the House and Senate. The committee was chaired by two Republican lawmakers from Wake County, Rep. Paul Stam and his former staffer and now state senator, Chad Barefoot. The committee took up competing versions of a bill about professional counseling and added unrelated, sweeping amendments that later re-emerged as key provisions of HB2. And it may explain why the bathroom bill oddly contains a provision on the minimum wage.
Campbell wrote that the rewritten bill seemed to overhaul a wide range of nondiscrimination ordinances, housing regulations and workplace regulations that some cities and counties have adopted. The new version also barred the establishment of a local minimum wage.
Read more here:
http://www.newsobserver.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/ned-barnett/article72280037.html#storylink=cpy